Thymus (genus) - Species

Species

About 350 species, including:

  • Thymus adamovicii
  • Thymus altaicus
  • Thymus amurensis
  • Thymus boissieri
  • Thymus bracteosus
  • Thymus broussonetii
  • Thymus caespititius
  • Thymus camphoratus
  • Thymus capitatus
  • Thymus capitellatus
  • Thymus camphoratus
  • Thymus carnosus
  • Thymus cephalotus
  • Thymus cherlerioides
  • Thymus ciliatus
  • Thymus cilicicus
  • Thymus cimicinus
  • Thymus citriodorus
  • Thymus comosus
  • Thymus comptus
  • Thymus curtus
  • Thymus decussatus
  • Thymus disjunctus
  • Thymus doerfleri
  • Thymus glabrescens
  • Thymus herba-barona
  • Thymus hirsutus
  • Thymus hyemalis
  • Thymus inaequalis
  • Thymus integer
  • Thymus lanuginosus
  • Thymus leucospermus
  • Thymus leucotrichus
  • Thymus longicaulis
  • Thymus longiflorus
  • Thymus mandschuricus
  • Thymus marschallianus
  • Thymus mastichina
  • Thymus membranaceus
  • Thymus mongolicus
  • Thymus montanus
  • Thymus moroderi
  • Thymus nervulosus
  • Thymus nummularis
  • Thymus odoratissimus
  • Thymus pallasianus
  • Thymus pannonicus
  • Thymus praecox
  • Thymus proximus
  • Thymus pseudolanuginosus
  • Thymus pulegioides
  • Thymus quinquecostatus
  • Thymus richardii
  • Thymus serpyllum
  • Thymus sibthorpii
  • Thymus striatus
  • Thymus thracicus
  • Thymus villosus
  • Thymus vulgaris
  • Thymus zygis

Read more about this topic:  Thymus (genus)

Famous quotes containing the word species:

    Prostitution is the most hideous of the afflictions produced by the unequal distribution of the world’s goods; this infamy stigmatizes the human species and bears witness against the social organization far more than does crime.
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    Not only does every animal live at the expense of some other animal or plant, but the very plants are at war.... The individuals of a species are like the crew of a foundered ship, and none but good swimmers have a chance of reaching the land.
    Thomas Henry Huxley (1825–95)

    There are minds so impatient of inferiority that their gratitude is a species of revenge, and they return benefits, not because recompense is a pleasure, but because obligation is a pain.
    Samuel Johnson (1709–1784)